Vicious: Chapter 23
Vicious (Sinners of Saint Book 1)
I WALTZED THROUGH THE DOUBLE glass doors of FHH, ignoring the stunned faces of the New York employees who thought they didnât have to deal with my sour-ass anymore. My face was relaxed, my posture poised. I was the same old Vicious, regardless of what I was dealing with in my personal life. The office was buzzing with post-holiday phone calls, overlapping chatter, the noise of working printers and people slurping their lukewarm coffees from their stupid âBest Dad/Mom/Grandmotherâ mugs.
I strode with purpose to Deanâs office. I couldnât work inside there right now for the obvious reasonâit was occupied by Deanâbut I didnât plan to leave NY, because there was nowhere else I would rather be.
After I saw her at the exhibit, as I sat in the searing hot bathtub and tried to get the feeling back in my numb, icy feet, Iâd made up my mind. I wasnât leaving until Emilia LeBlanc came with me. Even if that meant she was a package deal with her big-mouthed little sister, Rosie.
Emilia, my makeup is revenge.
Yours is forgiveness.
Youâre better than me.
I donât deserve you.
But Iâm going to take you, anyway.
But Jaime was right. I was acting like a fucking tool when it came to her, so the least I owed myself was not to let her slip through my fingers because of that this time.
Opening the door to Deanâs office without knocking, I breezed straight in and planted my ass on the chair directly in front of his desk.
He sat there, talking on his phone and deliberately not paying any attention to me. He scribbled something on a FHH notepad as he spoke. âOf course. Iâll let Sue know, and weâll send someone over as soon as possible. It shouldnât take long to draft something like this.â
Sliding the notepad across his glass desk, he pointed his finger at what he wrote, offering me a smirk.
You look like shit
I snatched the pen from his hand, grabbed the notepad and scribbled something, lifting it for him to see, right next to my dead expression.
Sue looks like a bad fuck
He chuckled, still engrossed in his phone conversation. âWell, actually, I do have a contact person in Los Angeles. Heâs one of FHHâs CEOs. His name is Baron Spencer. Sue will leave his contact details along with our proposition. Sound good?â
I gave him the notepad and pen, and he scribbled, tearing the paper from the pad and slapping it against my chest. I plucked it from my suit and read.
Your stepmom is a bad fuck. Weâre not switching branches
It was my turn to write.
Fine. Iâll join you here. Care if I sit on your lap?
He looked up at me, and I winked.
We were back to being rowdy teenagers. Before Emilia came to town and shit all over our relationship.
âExcuse me, Stephen? Sorry to cut you off. I have an important call on the other line, something personal. Can I get back to you in ten minutes? Thank you. Okay. Thanks. You too. Take care.â
He slammed his phone down on the desk. I noticed there were a few people peeking curiously from the reception area in the direction of his office, and itched to close the automatic blinds, but knew better than to step deeper into his territory. He wouldâve pissed right there in the middle of his office if it were appropriate.
âEmilia resigned,â he hissed out, opening a drawer and throwing her letter of resignation my way.
I didnât make a move to pick it up.
âI know,â I said with a shrug. âShe can do whatever the fuck she wants. Iâm not going anywhere without her, and I need more time here.â
âTell meâ¦â Dean leaned in, lacing his fingers together. âHow would you have reacted if I did the same to you? Told you I drove your high school sweetheart from our town just because I couldnât see her with you, then went ten years later and fucked her in your office, your bed, your fucking everything? Right in your face. How would you feel about that, Vicious? Because Iâm starting to believe that youâre a sociopath for not understanding the depth of the betrayal. True, the two of us were never as tight as you are with Jaime and I am with Trent, but we were still, in the grand scheme of things, brothers.â
It was my turn to lean forward. âIâm a bastard, Dean, but you knew. That night, at my party, before she came looking for you so you could go on your first date? You knew how I felt about it. But you went and did it anyway. I was angry with you for years, but I get it now. She was worth it. Emilia is a compulsion. You just want her, consequences be damned.
âAlthough when you dig deep and think about it, you have to admit, I was there first. Her heart beat for me, and you saw it. You saw it in class. You saw it in the hallways. The way she looked at me in the cafeteria. You saw it in the way she came to our football games, but only when I played, even though you played every single week while I sat on the bench most of the season. She never showed her face on those blue bleachers until after I made first-string. We all knew. Jaime knew. Trent knew. You and I knew. I think the only person who didnât realize it was Emilia herself. Youâve moved on. You would never settle for her today, and you know it. You like the variety too much.â
He considered my words, tilting his chin down in acceptance. âWe canât both be at the same branch. The LA office is too important to be neglected, and having the two of us in the hallways here is going to result in a power struggle we donât want. But Vic, Iâm so fucking mad at you, I canât even look at you right now. Not only for what you did when we were eighteen, but also for what you did in my bed. In my house. With her.â
My jaw clenched, but I didnât dare look away. I stared at him so hard I thought we were both going to pounce on each other again. My left eye was still purple, and his nose was still bruised from our hotel incident.
Dean was the first to open his mouth. âMake it worth my while to sit around in Los Angeles while you chase Millieâs ass and beg her to forgive the assholeness that is you.â
âName your price.â I knew there were sacrifices to be made, and I was willing to make them. It was justifiable. I got it. Iâd fucked up and I needed to atone for my sins.
âSell me ten percent of your shares.â Dean shrugged. âAnd Iâll pack a bag and wait it out in LA for six months.â
âThatâs seven million dollarsâ worth,â I ground out.
Each of us held 25% of the shares. We had equal power. Buying out my shares was buying me out of my power, my influence, my everything. I wanted to laugh in his face, but he looked too serious to fuck with. By the way his hand clenched his phone as he tapped it against his lips, I knew he meant business.
âFuck that shit. I mean really, Dean?â I huffed. âItâs not like I fucked your sister.â
âI actually suspect you did fuck Keeley at some point, but Iâm not going to ask you about it for your sake. You asked me to name a price, Vicious, and I did. Take it or leave it.â
âFive percent,â I shot back. I was so used to negotiating that I thought maybe I could sell him something I could buy back for double or triple the price.
âTen percent for six months, and if you try to negotiate one more time, Iâm taking this offer off the table, and we both know whatâs gonna happen.â
Yes. Trent and Jaime would fly out to New York to babysit us again. Then, Jaime was going to drag my ass back to Los Angeles like I was a kicking and screaming toddler and Iâd lose her. Forever.
She was mine. I didnât come this far just to turn around and walk out of this again.
âFine,â I said, finally. âTen percent. Iâll draft the contract tomorrow.â
âNo need. Iâll ask my lawyer to do it,â Dean said. âI donât trust your ass with anything anymore. Oh, I want you to keep Sue. Youâre right. She is a mediocre fuck and she wants me to meet her parents, even though I told her I never want to date. Ever. In. My. Life.â
âFine.â My nostrils flared and I closed my eyes. This was a fucking nightmare.
But Dean continued, undeterred. âI also donât want you in my apartment. You wonât be fucking my ex-girlfriend in my bed anymore. You can take the apartment you gave Millie. Itâs vacant now, anyway.â
I didnât say a word, processing it all. My expression mustâve been crestfallen, because Deanâs smile only grew wider by the second.
âShit, man, youâre going to do this, huh? For real.â He threw a foam ball at me.
I didnât blink or reply. Goddammit, I was making a deal with this joker.
Dean got up from his chair and leaned into my face. âHow far are you willing to go for this girl, Vic?â
I ran a hand through my hair, tugging hard at the roots. âWell, I think Iâm about to find the fuck out.â
The next couple of days were busy. I signed the contract Deanâs lawyer had drafted (not his dadâa sorry bastard fresh out of law school who drafted a contract littered with enough loopholes and ways out for me to play with when the time came), and I moved my shit into Emiliaâs apartment downstairs. Dean was scheduled to head to Los Angeles at the end of the week. We told his staff that I was staying in order to recruit two more lawyers to our New York branch and that I needed to train them. It was only a half-lie. This had been in the works for months now, but I was never set to train them in New York.
People bought it. Though I didnât know why we needed to explain anything. They fucking worked for us.
Jaime lost his shit when he heard I only had fifteen percent left in the company.
And Trent laughed and said he didnât feel sorry for me after treating him like an asshole when he confided in me about knocking up that stripper.
I gave Emilia two days. Two fucking days before I came for her. Finding out where she lived was no issue. Fiscal Heights Holdings still had to send her a paycheck for her last week of work, and our personnel head had her new address.
I decided to personally deliver the check, because I was nice like that.
Truthfully, I had no fucking clue what I was doing. I knew I was pursuing her, that Iâd given up a lot to stay in New York for her, postponing my revenge on Jo and putting my personal goals on the back burner, but I didnât understand any other part about this. I tried not to label what I felt for her. I tried not to read too much into it. As I said, Emilia was an impulse. Currently, all I knew was that I was acting on it. On my instinct. On my need. On something feral and basic.
Sheâd moved to a run-down neighborhood in the Bronx.
Her apartment was just above a Chinese joint that smelled of grease and sweat and had bathroom tiles on the walls. All around on her block, I saw old cars with busted windows and windshields. Gray wet trash lined the gutters, and string-thin, wide-eyed women carried groceries in a hurry to escape whatever danger was waiting for them around the corner. It was one thing to live in a zip code that wasnât exactly desirable because you had cash flow issues, but a completely other thing to live in a neighborhood that looked like it had one of the highest crime rates in the city.
What the hell was she thinking? She and Rosie screamed prey. They were small, beautiful, innocent, and alone.
I waited outside the door that led upstairs for two hours before she came back home. It was boring as fuck so I spent my time reading emails and making phone calls. I stood out in this neighborhood like a sore thumb. But I didnât give a shit.
Emilia approached the building, and when she realized that I was there at her front door, she rolled her eyes and sighed. âGo away, Vicious. Youâre like a puppy begging for me to adopt you and take you home. Only significantly less cute.â She scrunched her nose.
I didnât grace that shit with an answer, just pulled out her check from my breast pocket and handed it to her. She plucked it from between my fingers, her eyes skimming over it. There was a brief moment where I thought she was going to throw it back in my face, but then she must have remembered how poor she was.
âThanks,â she murmured, slipping the check into her messenger bag.
âI donât like you living in this neighborhood.â I took a step closer.
She crossed her arms as she took me in. âThen itâs a good thing itâs none of your business.â
âSince when are you so cold?â
âSince you barged into my life again and I was stupid enough to let you inâagainâand I promised myself there wonât be a third time. What do you want, Vicious?â
That was a good question. I bit my lower lip and took in her little body, in her yellow-and-red checked coat.
âI want to fuck you again,â I admitted with a groan.
âFuck me, or use me so you can avenge your stepmom?â
âItâs not about that. Fuck the money. Fuck my stepmom,â I said, realizing it was the truth. I didnât care about all those things. Not when I was about to lose her.
If I hadnât already.
âI donât believe you.â
âIâll never ask you to do anything about it ever again. All I ask is for your time, so I can explain.â
âThanks, but no thanks.â She inserted her key into the lock and was on the stairs inside with the door shut before I had the chance to do my usual move of shoving my foot into the gap.
I banged my fist on the painted metal. At least the door looked sturdy. âNow that I know when you get back from work every day, Iâm going to wait for you outside the subway and see you home safely.â
She laughed from the other side, a cold laugh that sheâd learned and mastered because of me. Because of everything Iâd done to her.
âIf you want to waste your time, be my guest. Iâm not going to forgive you. And even if I did, I wouldnât want to be with you.â
âWeâll see about that.â I waited for another response, but this time there was only silence. I grinned quietly to myself. The push and pull was back. She could push all she wanted, but she was going to be pulled back to where she belonged. My arms.
I was still eyeing the door when a skinny white guy who was a veteran junkie, judging by his rotten teeth and lost eyes, shuffled for the door, holding a plastic bag. âYou live here?â I growled.
He nodded, confused.
âThird floor. âSup, man. You lookinâ to score?â
âNo, douchbag, Iâm your motherfucking nightmare. Stay away from the girls on the second floor. Tell your junkie friends and anyone you know in this goddamn shithole the same thing.â I shoved five hundred-dollar bills into his hand. And fuck, why was it muddy? I didnât even want to know. âFor every day theyâre safe and left alone here, youâll get another hundred. Deal?â
His eyes widened in disbelief, his jaw falling. I donât think heâd heard a coherent sentence in a while. âSure, man. Sure.â
I turned around and walked away, hoping it was worth it.
It had to be.
I had a feeling it would be.